Park Pride Launches Parks for All Comprehensive Campaign
Welcome from Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens
Keynote Speakers
Parks: The Public Health Superpower Hiding in Plain Sight
Keynote Speaker:
- Dr. Howard Frumkin
Senior Vice President, Trust for Public Land
If we had a pill that delivered as many health benefits as parks, we’d all be taking that pill every day. Parks directly improve both mental health and physical health. They also improve health in indirect ways, such as by strengthening social connections and building resilience to climate-related disasters. Many insights about the power of parks are ancient—but in recent years, scientific advances have greatly deepened our understanding. Like many public health assets, park benefits are not equitably distributed; park equity is a pathway to health equity. This presentation will survey the many ways in which parks deliver health, well-being, and thriving, drawing on the latest science, address crucial equity considerations, and propose some paths forward for park professionals, park advocates, health professionals, and communities.
Reconciliation through Partnership: Creating Georgia’s First National Park and Preserve
Keynote Speakers:
- Seth Clark
Executive Director, Ocmulgee National Park and Preserve Initiative - Tracie Revis
Director of Advocacy, Ocmulgee National Park and Preserve Initiative
The Ocmulgee National Park and Preserve Initiative is a tribal, non-tribal partnership that advocates to create Georgia’s first National Park and Preserve. Tracie Revis, a Muscogee (Creek) Citizen and Seth Clark, a middle Georgia native, will discuss their efforts to create a National Park and Preserve that will be co-managed by the National Park Service and the Muscogee (Creek) Nation. Tracie and Seth will also describe how the partnership between the middle Georgia community and the Muscogee (Creek) Nation offers avenues for reconciliation and healing for the region and is seen as a national model for tribal/non-tribal partnerships.
Designing Towards Justice
Keynote Speaker:
- Jha D Amazi
Principal, MASS Design Group
Description: Over the past decade, the team at MASS Design Group has worked with partners in the US and across the globe on a number of projects that explore new ways to shift narratives, serve as a catalyst for truth-telling, and advance collective healing through the built environment. In 2020, they established the Public Memory and Memorials Lab at MASS, an initiative that advances research, training, and built work around a central thesis: spatializing memory can heal us and inspire collective action for generations to come. Jha D Amazi, Director of the Public Memory and Memorials Lab, will share several projects that demonstrate how the team is working to expand narratives through public memory.
No Presentation Available
Breakout Sessions:
Healing Parks through Invasive Plant Management
Speakers:
- Eli Dickerson, Director of Education, Park Pride (Moderator)
- Michael Hudgins, Founder of Woods Keeper
- Tea Povolny, Founder of EcoLogic
Parks are among the few places in cities where natural ecosystems can thrive. However, the presence of invasive plant species threatens the delicate balance of life found there. Using local case studies including the Fernbank Forest and Riverwalk Atlanta, attendees at this session will learn low-impact methods for invasive plant removal, tips for landscape assessment, and how to tackle regenerative projects in their local park or greenspace.
Expanding Access to Nature for the Mobility Impaired
Speakers:
- Melanie Dunn, Assistant Director, Aimee Copeland Foundation (Co-Moderator)
- Danielle Bunch, Lead Conservationist, Newman Wetlands- Clayton County Water Authority (Co-Moderator)
- Lindsay Wilbanks, ATC buddy with Aimee Copeland Foundation; Partner of ATC user
For many people confined to wheelchairs or who cannot leave their homes due to other mobility challenges, experiencing the healing properties of nature has often been out of reach. But a new program, All Terrain Georgia, is changing that. Attend this interactive demonstration session and learn about the partnership that is expanding access to nature and how individuals with mobility impairments will be able to navigate Georgia’s beautiful state parks with assistance from advanced, all-terrain wheelchairs.
Technology + Nature: A New Collaboration to Fortify the City in the Forest
Speakers:
- Denise Cardin, Director of Conservation and Operations at Blue Heron Nature Preserve
- Javier Irizarry, Professor and Director of CONECTech Lab at Georgia Tech
- Taryn Heidel, Senior Arborist, City of Atlanta
- Melody Harclerode, FAIA, Executive Director at Blue Heron Nature Preserve
Technology and nature come together in a collaborative study at the Blue Heron Nature Preserve to protect Atlanta’s tree canopy and fortify urban resilience. Attendees will explore the benefits of embracing technology in the creation of strategic plans and learn about the use of drones and apps to collect data, benchmark the health of ecosystems, and monitor climate change impacts on watersheds, heat islands, and tree canopy.
Healing Experiences in Nature
Speakers:
- Carolyn Hartfield, Outdoor Adventure Leader, Hartfield’s Hikers
- Theresa Hall, Travel Advisor, Travel Buddies- Atlanta
- James “JB” Bailey, Caregiver, Massage Therapist and Retired Nurse, Hartfield’s Hikers
- Karen Lindauer, Hartfield’s Hikers
The health benefits of parks are real. Panelists will discuss how purposeful visits to nature helped them expand and explore new lifelong healthy living practices. Attendees will learn how an engagement in outdoor activities—including simply sitting outdoors absorbing vitamin D, walking to improve fitness, and establishing social connections—builds an appreciation for nature that contributes to healing, physical fitness, and emotional well-being.
Finding Healing in the Forest at Any Age
Speakers:
- Anamarie Ngala-Bey, Environmental Education Programs Manager, West Atlanta Watershed Alliance (moderator)
- Janelle Wright, Project Manager/Food Distribution/Eldercare with Outdoor Activity Center and NPU-S
- Hanifah Shoatz-Bey, Traditional Midwifery Advocate
- Asim Hill, Student and O-Academy youth at Outdoor Activity Center
During this panel discussion, speakers will discuss the various forest-based programing offered by the West Atlanta Watershed Alliance to encourage multi-generational healing. From nature play, to agroforestry and increasing access to fresh food, to wellness programing, the healing benefits of parks are accessible to all ages (as attendees will hear from a youth panelist!).
Giving “The Butterfly” New Wings: Creating Community Parks in Baltimore’s “Black Butterfly”
Speakers:
- Steven Preston, Park Design and Construction Manager, Parks & People, Baltimore, MD (moderator)
- Larry Brown, Jr., Assistant Director, Baltimore Lead, Maryland Dept. of Housing and Community Development
- Dr. Franklin Lance, President & CEO, Parks & People, Baltimore, MD
- Laura Connelly, Environmental Park Projects Manager, Parks & People, Baltimore, MD
In 2016, Parks & People, along with the State of Maryland and the City of Baltimore, began engaging communities within a region known as the “Black Butterfly,” low-income, majority Black neighborhoods that make up large swaths of the east and west halves of the city. Learn how this partnership has transformed vacant homes and vacant lots in these areas into new parks, instilling pride, reducing health and environmental disparities, and restoring a sense of community.
The Black River: South Carolina’s Newest State Park
Speakers:
- Holley Owings, PLA, Principal with Earth Design
- Maria Whitehead, PhD, Senior Director of Land, Southeast with Open Space Institute
- James Revis, Regional Chief, Upper Coast with South Carolina Department of Parks, Recreation & Tourism
- Mayor Frank McClary, Mayor, Town of Andrews, SC
The Black River water trail will become South Carolina’s newest state park. This 70-mile corridor will connect a network of riverside properties owned by public and private partners along the Black River, allowing visitors to paddle through South Carolina’s low country. Running through Williamsburg and Georgetown County, the river flows through a historically underserved community that is rich in culture and history. Learn how the project team engaged local residents to design a park that provides multiple benefits, including flood mitigation, historic preservation, and social justice.
Memorializing the Hidden History of Atlanta’s Parks
Speakers:
- Victoria Lemos, Historian and podcast producer at Archive Atlanta
- Ann Hill Bond, Journalist with Atlanta Voice News and Preservationist with Fulton County Remembrance Coalition
Every park has a story, as well as a history that provides insight into a city’s social fabric. This session will present the hidden history of Atlanta’s parks, focusing on the displacement of Indigenous and Black people. Speakers will discuss how parks are used today, by whom, and what efforts (if any) have been made to memorialize the forgotten past. Attendees will learn how intentional park planning can be restorative and commemorative in the healing process for the descendants that still walk this land.
No Presentation Available
Guided Walk…with a Doc!
Speakers:
- Roberta Malavenda, Executive Director, CDF Action & Walk with a Doc
- Saria Hassan, MD, Emory University, Walk with a Doc
Walk with Garden grounds with leaders and members of the Clarkston Walk with a Doc chapter to learn about this nationwide program that pairs physicians with community walking groups. Hear from both physicians and participants about the successes of the program to improve the whole body and health of individuals. Attendees will also learn how to find an existing group or start a new group in your community.
No Presentation Available
Storytelling: Educating, Healing and Deepening Our Connection to Place
Speakers:
- Sally Bethea, Retired Riverkeeper and ED at Chattahoochee Riverkeeper
- Hannah Palmer, Writer and Urban Designer, Finding the Flint (moderator)
- David Haskell, Writer and Professor at University of the South, Sewanee
Storytelling and eco-memoirs connect people with their environment in ways that are visceral and informative, inspiring action on behalf of nature. This session with renowned environmentalists and authors will offer lively conversation, insights, and lessons learned from the speakers’ personal and powerful experiences with the Chattahoochee and Flint Rivers, and nature near and far.
No Presentation Available
Rising to the Challenge of Reinvention: A Discussion with Citywide Parks Nonprofits
Speakers:
- Charlie McCabe, Charlie McCabe Consulting LLC (Moderator)
- Michael Halicki, Executive Director, Park Pride
- Dr. Franklin Lance, President & CEO, Parks & People Foundation, Baltimore, MD
- Colin Wallis, CEO of Austin Parks Foundation, Austin, TX
Over the past few years, the pandemic and social justice movements like Black Lives Matter have brought greater attention – both positive and negative – to the role of parks in cities. At the start of the pandemic, local parks were places of solace for residents confined to their homes. As restrictions were loosened, park use expanded in new and interesting ways; but at the same time, staffing shortages and supply chain issues have hindered park maintenance and development efforts, resulting in increased trash, broken infrastructure, and delays and cost increases in park construction projects. Hear how three citywide park non-profits in Atlanta, Baltimore, and Austin have risen to the challenge of reinvention as they redefine their roles as the connective tissue of the urban parks movement in the cities they serve.
No Presentation Available
Grant Park: Whose Park is it Anyway?
Speakers:
- Jason Winston, Atlanta City Councilmember, District 1
- Douglas Blackmon, Author and Professor, Georgia State University
- Michelle Blackmon, Executive Director, Grant Park Conservancy
- Shalya Forte, Senior Director, SXM Media, DE&I Business Partner
During this candid panel discussion, speakers will explore park equity and access through the lens of Grant Park’s complicated past. Topics will include the history of segregation in Atlanta’s parks, the debate over Civil War/Confederate monuments in public spaces, atrocities carried out in park spaces including the Westside Park and the recently acquired Chattahoochee Brick Factory site, and parks named after White men who perpetrated violence against the Black community.
No Presentation Available
Guided Walk: Bringing Mindfulness to Birdwatching
Speakers:
- Alex LoCastro, Conservation Program Coordinator, Georgia Audubon
- Sheridan Alford, Community Engagement Manager, Georgia Audubon (moderator)
- Kiana Leveritte, Community Outreach Coordinator, Georgia Audubon
Stretch your legs and experience the healing power of parks with a guided walk through the Atlanta Botanical Garden. Attendees will learn accessible methods of mindfulness that can be used while birding, gardening, or enjoying any park or greenspace.
No Presentation Available
Policy Talk: Prioritizing Greenspace Equity in Atlanta
Speakers:
- Justin Cutler, Commissioner of Parks & Recreation, City of Atlanta
- Chandra Farley, Chief Sustainability Officer, City of Atlanta
- David R. Brown, Ph.D., FACSM, Senior Behavioral Scientist, Policies for Active Communities Team, Physical Activity and Health Branch, CDC, Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity
- Rachel Maher, Director of Policy & Communications, Park Pride (moderator)
Atlanta is a different city than it was three years ago, and compounding challenges—including persistent public health crises, the impacts of climate change, and the need to address historical wrongs—have heightened the urgency for greenspace interventions that enhance quality of life for all residents. This panel discussion with local leaders will address the policy changes and mindset shifts required for the environmental, mental, and physical health benefits of parks to become equitably accessible to all Atlantans.
No Presentation Available